AI tools are often built to take inputs—injury type, symptoms, treatment history—and output a rough range. That can be useful if you’re trying to organize your information.
But in Norwalk, the practical reality is that insurers frequently focus on documentation quality and timeline consistency, not just the diagnosis name. A calculator can’t reliably evaluate:
- whether your symptoms were reported promptly after the incident
- whether your treatment plan in Connecticut followed reasonable medical guidance
- whether your functional problems (concentration, headaches, balance) are supported by notes and records
- whether the other side will dispute causation (especially when symptoms overlap with stress, migraines, or sleep issues)
So think of AI as a starting point for questions—not a substitute for a Connecticut legal evaluation tied to your evidence.


